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The Brooks Digs In

Barbara Hyde brought a gift to the groundbreaking of the future Memphis Brooks Museum of Art.

Speaking before a crowd of dignitaries and press under a tent at Union Avenue and Front Street Thursday morning, she announced that she and husband Pitt were making a $20 million commitment toward the completion of the facility that is expected to open in 2026.

That contribution brings the total raised to 75 percent of the $180 million fundraising goal for the project.

Zoe Kahr, the Brooks’ executive director, said she was confident that the museum will reach its goal. “Memphians invested $100 million in their new art museum before seeing a single rendering,” she said. “Tennesseans committed another $35 million to their oldest and largest art museum before construction began.”

Groundbreaking for the Brooks on the Bluff, June 1st. Photo by Jon W. Sparks

Four years ago, the museum had an event on the site to announce that renowned design firm Herzog & de Meuron of Basel, Switzerland and New York, would collaborate with Memphis-based archimania, the architect of record.

Occupying the site that day was a fire station and parking garage. In recent months, those have been razed and plans are proceeding to do seismic work and construction.

The new 122,000 square-foot building will feature nearly 50 percent more gallery space than the museum’s current home in Overton Park. The space will be used to to exhibit Memphis’ growing permanent art collection, as well as new spaces for education and art-making for all ages. Officials said the new Brooks will include “600 percent more art-filled public spaces than the current facility.”

The new Brooks will have a restaurant and gift shop, highlighting Memphis markers and artists. A community courtyard in the heart of the building will be 10,000 square feet, the size of two full NBA courts. The rooftop will provides visitors with an expansive green-space: an art park in the sky with an event pavilion. The courtyard and the rooftop will be open to the public without museum admission. 

The museum campus will include a new pedestrian plaza shared by the museum and Cossitt Library as well as connecting the Bluff Walk, which now ends behind Cossitt Library, and the River Walk on Union Avenue.

The museum’s wide open areas will afford views of the Mississippi River. Pedestrians on Front Street will have a view into the gallery level. The other side facing the river will be more closed off to minimize the effects of sunlight, but there will be two windows.

Brooks executive director Zoe Kahr faces the media at the museum groundbreaking on June 1, 2023.

“Our architects did a beautiful job of thinking about the site and how to optimize that pedestrian experience where you look into the museum and you understand what’s in there so you’re not intimidated,” Kahr said.

She also noted that the entire rooftop will be a garden. “It will have art, it’ll have programs, it’s going to have a beautiful event pavilion. I think it’s going to be the best place to get married in Memphis, but I may be biased.”

Kahr said that the museum is intentional about its art spaces. “We’re creating discrete moments where you’re immersed in the art and then you’re brought back to the river. Its public spaces are all about the river.”

When she arrived to take over at the Brooks last November, Kahr knew that changes and challenges would be in the mix, and she was looking forward to it.

“It’s so unusual to get the chance to reexamine and reinstall your permanent collection,” she said. “I’d say we’re leading with that as a set of projects, and our curatorial team has really been spending a lot of time thinking about what stories we can tell from our collection.”

They’re also looking at what objects are not in the collection. “What do we need to tell those stories that we think are important? That’s been a primary focus. But then we’re also thinking about what will be on view here in terms of loan exhibitions.”

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Local Psychotherapist Talks Men’s Mental Health Amid New Study

Information released by Mental Health America, a national nonprofit “dedicated to the promotion of mental health” through public education, research advocacy, public policy, and direct service, showed that out of 151,781,326 people in the male population of the U.S., about six million are affected by depression.

Mental Health America said that male depression often goes undiagnosed, and is one of five major mental health problems affecting men. Others include anxiety, bipolar disorder, psychosis and schizophrenia, and eating disorders.

According to Rick Harrell of RH Counseling Services in Memphis, men are less likely to seek out mental health services. A January 2023 report from Statista estimated that 12.1 percent of U.S. men received mental health treatment or counseling in the past year (2021).

“A lot of that comes from the various stigmas that come along with getting help,” said Harrell. “[Like] if you seek out help in some way, you’re crazy, or all the stigmas that come with that. Men also internalize things more than women do, and they try to just deal with it on their own.”

The information compiled by Mental Health America states that some of the reasons men fail to seek help are societal norms, reluctance to talk, and downplaying of symptoms.

While these stigmas have always existed, Harrell said that there has been more of an emphasis on mental health lately, which has resulted in more men enrolling in counseling services.

A poll issued by East Tennessee State University (ETSU) showed that the mental health of Tennesseans was impacted by the COVID-19 pandemic. A poll conducted by the Applied Social Research Lab at ETSU concluded that “4.6% of Tennesseans were symptomatic of anxiety and 27.1% were symptomatic of depressive disorder.”

While the pandemic undoubtedly had an effect on mental health, it also led to more people seeking out counseling and therapy services. The National Library of Medicine reported that as of September 2020, men sought out these services at a higher rate than women.

Harrell has seen this in his own practice, as well. He said that in his 24 years of practice, he’s seen a majority of his male patients coming as a result of being pushed or ordered to attend — as a result of a court order or couple’s counseling. He has recently seen a shift, where more men are coming on their own accord.

“I have seen over the last few years, post-pandemic, more men take the initiative to seek out therapy on their own,” said Harrell. “I think we’re becoming more knowledgeable about it, and I think the stigmas that have been associated with getting mental health services — we’re beginning to dispel some of those things.

“It’s okay to not be okay, but it’s not okay to stay not okay,” said Harrell. “Knowing that there’s help out here, and you can heal from the issues. I think when we keep it in the forefront and we continue to dispel the myths and the stigmas that center around mental health and educate our communities, we begin to make some improvements in that space.”

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Ground Breaks on New Memphis Brooks Museum of Art

Ground broke Thursday morning on the Memphis Brooks Museum of Art’s new home Downtown. 

Officials turned the ceremonious first shovels of dirt at the space on Front Street between Monroe and and Union. Demolition work has been underway for months at the site razing a parking garage and the headquarters for the Memphis Fire Department. 

Officials also announced that, so far, they have raised 75 percent of the $180 million fundraising goal for the project. 

”The excitement around this project is incredible.” said, Zoe Kahr, the Brooks’ executive director. “Memphians invested $100 million in their new art museum before seeing a single rendering. Tennesseans committed another $35 million to their oldest and largest art museum before construction began. Today, together, as we break ground on Memphis’ art museum I know the excitement has only just begun.”

The new 122,000 square-foot building will feature nearly 50 percent more gallery space than the museum’s current home in Overton Park. The space will be used to to exhibit Memphis’ growing permanent art collection, as well as new spaces for education and art-making for all ages. Officials said the new Brooks will include “600 percent more art-filled public spaces than the current facility.”

The new Brooks will have a restaurant and gift shop, highlighting Memphis markers and artists. A community courtyard in the heart of the building will be 10,000 square feet, the size of two full NBA courts. The rooftop will provides visitors with an expansive green-space: an art park in the sky, officials said, complete with an event pavilion. Both the courtyard and the rooftop will be open to the public without museum admission. 

The museum campus will include a new pedestrian plaza shared by the museum and Cossitt Library as well as connecting the Bluff Walk, currently terminating behind Cossitt Library, and the River Walk on Union Avenue. 

“Today’s groundbreaking is one more sign of the strong growth and private investments in our city,” Mayor Jim Strickland said. “Memphis’ new art museum is a civic asset that will become the front porch for our city and a magnet for tourism.”

Construction for the new facility is expected to be complete by the end of 2025. The building will likely open in early 2026. The Brooks in Overton Park will remain open until the new building officially opens.